Cure 1

Good ol' Canadian grit in the face of establishment snottiness, haughtiness, and blindness to science: Rick Simpson has found that high-CBD cannabis oil can cure cancer and many other ailments, but his doctors, the Royal Canadian Legion, and the Canadian Cancer Society don't want to hear about it.

30% of deaths of Canadians are from cancer.

More stats from cancer.ca:

It is estimated that in 2013:

96,200 Canadian men will be diagnosed with cancer and 39,400 men will die from cancer.

91,400 Canadian women will be diagnosed with cancer and 36,100 women will die from cancer.

On average, over 500 Canadians will be diagnosed with cancer every day.

On average, over 200 Canadians will die from cancer every day.

In the USA, there is a report out that indicates some cancer testing methods can actually cause cancer. It seems like the left hand doesn't know what the right hand is doing.

Maybe Canadian scientists and doctors think that they can't study it because it is a controlled substance. That is a lame excuse. In their Hippocratic Oath, doctors swear to "apply, for the benefit of the sick, all measures which are required, avoiding those twin traps of overtreatment and therapeutic nihilism." I would say that radiology and chemotherapy are overtreatments while totally ignoring reports of something that has worked in multiple instances in curing cancer is not therapeutic nihilism, but is to abscond into the shadows of an indifferent and irresponsible medical establishment and that indicates a preference for the deaths of patients numbering in the thousands.

On his website at phoenixtears.ca, there is a CNN documentary that further substantiates the healing power of the plant. The video covers 2 cases of children with extreme epilepsy. The frequent seizures stopped after treatment with high CBD hemp oil.

If you know someone battling a disease such as cancer, rheumatoid arthritis, diabetes, alcoholism, PTSD, epilepsy, antibiotic-resistant infections, neurological disorders, and muscular dystrophy, ask Dixie Botanicals about their track record on that disease.

Cure 3

Another cure for cancer using something more readily available is turmeric.

Cure 4 -- pokeberry aka inkweed

I loved this plant since when I first saw it growing along the mountlets (small mountains) that surround and sometimes weave into every city in Korea. The purple juice was an amazing, perfect shade. And, oddly, I loved how it stained my fingers when I pressed open a berry.

I've done a bit of research off and on about this. Earlier today I read that it has cancer-fighting properties. See my Google+ profile under stedawa. Now, I've read a first person account of this plant able to cure cancer and mention of First Nation healers knowing this property. A US Georgia state government webpage further praises the berry.

Another link (not with the cancer connection, but perhaps a step towards more open acceptance of R&D into the medicinal uses of canobliss:

Solving 9/11

Another unraveling of unwanted truth seems to be contained in a book called Solving 9/11: The Deception That Changed the World by Christopher Bollyn(2012) and reviewed by Robert A. Sungenis, Sr., Ph.D on May 11, 2012. This 39 page book review is viewable and downloadable (although I initially didn't get the download to work) at Mr Bollyn's website http://www.bollyn.com/public/Review_of_Solving_911.pdf.

In another distantly related topic, we meander in our truth-seeking from cannabis to ballistics and now to cannibalistic. Some rare footage from a war zone in Syria point to a fiendish mindset of one of the Syrian rebels ' leaders (whose group the USA is supplying weapons to?). I now have doubts as to the sanity, mental and emotional stability as well as humanitarian capacity and governance ability of any group led by such a person. Even feral alley cats on their worst behavior in territorial disputes do not sink to such depths.

In a slightly related note, we read that Malaysian Muslims want to prevent people of other religions from using the word Allah to refer to the Supreme Deity.

The Ancient Name of the Deity pre-dates all human attempts to label it. Allah, Hoda, Wakan Tanka, Kitchi Manitou (the Great Mystery), G-d, Elohim, Theos, Dios, Adonai, Jah, Jehovah, ... -- are but a few of such nominalizations (putting into noun form, naming). Thus, originally it was nameless, and in the experience of spirituality, words and letters dissolve into silence and wordlessness (not quite aphasia, but a bit like Saul/Paul's experience on the road to Damascus). I don't think any person or group should claim an exclusive right for sole use one of those names. If the speakers are speaking Arabic but are Christian or Jewish or anything else, if Allah is the Arabic name for God, then why shouldn't they use it? Or was the name Allah coined by Muhammad, and did it replace a previous term? [No, no.]

Wikipedia has an entry on Allah. It also reports that "The government of Malaysia in 2007 outlawed usage of the term Allah in any other but Muslim contexts, but the High Court in 2009 revoked the law, ruling that it was unconstitutional. While Allah had been used for the Christian God in Malay for more than four centuries, the contemporary controversy was triggered by usage of Allah by the Roman Catholic newspaper The Herald. The government appealed the court ruling, and the High Court suspended implementation of its verdict until the appeal was heard. In October 2013, the court ruled in favor of the government's ban."

The implications of this ruling infringe on the rights of Malay Christians as well as Baha'is and Sikhs. More on the legal side here.

A refrigerator used to be called an icebox,but they both refer to a machine that keeps food cool. A worm was an earthworm until it got its scientific name Lumbricina.

Alpha Blondy sings about the unity of God's names in his song God is One. Although he equates Manifestations or Messengers of God (Jesus, Krishna) as on equal station with the Spirit that inspired them, and some may dispute that, he does put together a good list of some of the names of God.